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They say 'incident'. To me it's genocide

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  • They say 'incident'. To me it's genocide

    They say 'incident'. To me it's genocide

    When its finest novelist attacked Turkey's bloody past, he became a
    hero for Armenians and Turks alike, says Nouritza Matossiann

    Nouritza Matossiann
    Sunday February 27 2005
    The Observer


    There is a Turkish saying: 'A sword won't cut without inspiration from
    the pen.'

    Orhan Pamuk, wielder of Turkey's finest pen, has spoken and cut a
    swath through his country's conscience. His most recent novel Snow was
    set in Kars and peppered with references to the Armenian culture of
    that formerly Armenian city. Brilliant novelist, translated in 20
    languages, winner of international prizes, he has become a hate
    figure.

    His crime was one sentence in an interview with the Swiss newspaper
    Tagesanzeiger this month. 'Thirty thousand Kurds and a million
    Armenians were killed in Turkey. Almost no one dares speak but me, and
    the nationalists hate me for that.' All hell broke loose. The press
    attacked him for dishonouring the Turkish state and incitement to
    racial violence. He has been called a liar, 'a miserable creature' and
    a 'black writer' in the daily Hurriyet. Professor Hikmet Ozdemir, head
    of the Armenian studies department at the Turkish Union of Historians,
    rejected his statement as a 'great lie'.

    A lone voice, Halil Berktay, professor at Sabanci University,
    supported Pamuk: 'In 1915-16 about 800,000 or one million Armenians
    were killed for sure.'

    Mehmet Üçok, an attorney, filed charges at the Kayseri
    public prosecutor's office. Another charge was filed by Kayseri Bar
    Association attorney Orhan Pekmezci: 'Pamuk has made groundless claims
    against the Turkish identity, the Turkish military and Turkey as a
    whole. He should be punished for violating Articles 159 and 312 of the
    Turkish penal code. He made a statement provoking the people to hatred
    and animosity through the media, which is defined as a crime in
    Article 312.'

    I find this ironic. My mother's family was deported from the historic
    Armenian city of Kayseri, leaving their murdered menfolk behind.

    I was recently in Istanbul lecturing on my biography of
    Armenian-American artist Arshile Gorky, the basis for the
    controversial genocide movie Ararat. Official permission for my talk
    required me not to utter the word 'genocide' to refer to the Ottoman
    empire's systematic deportations, tortures and killings of two million
    Armenians which Gorky witnessed. I might refer to those
    'incidents'. The crime has never been acknowledged by successive
    Turkish governments, Britain or the United States.

    Recent discussions of Turkey's possible entry into the EU were
    dominated by France and other countries demanding that Turkey first
    admit the Armenian genocide. What if Britain had a law forbidding
    criticism of its history, identity, or the armed forces? Turkey has
    far to go to reach the legal standards of EU members, with their
    humane and non-discriminatory laws aiming at standards of truth and
    reason. So much hatred. So much anger. What does Turkey have to hide?

    'Pamuk has always defended freedom of speech and thought, the rights
    of minorities,' writes Hrant Dink, owner of the Armenian
    Turkish-language weekly Agos . 'For 90 years we Armenians have been
    abused, insulted and discriminated against. We cannot enter certain
    professions, we Turkified our names. We have learnt to survive and
    endure without protest. Maybe it is time that the Turkish people also
    learnt tolerance and endurance from us.'

    In London, a thinly veiled propaganda exercise at the Royal Academy
    trumpets Turkish empires, making far-reaching claims about the origins
    of the 'Turkic peoples'. Echoes of master-race ideology. Pamuk himself
    writes in the Academy journal: 'Turks gripped by romantic myths of
    nationalism are keen to establish that we come from Mongolia or
    central Asia... scholars have come no closer to offering definitive or
    convincing evidence to link us with a particular time and place.'

    In the show the contributions of other nationals in the Ottoman empire
    - Armenians, Greeks and Jews - are not credited. Yet their handiwork
    is everywhere, in architecture, pottery, carpets, manuscripts.

    Britain colludes in this travesty for the sake of oil interests in
    Azerbaijan, Turkey's closest ally.

    Akin Birdal, vice-president of the International Federation of Human
    Rights Leagues, emphasises: 'No matter we have come to the 90th year
    of "incidents" Orhan Pamuk talked about, these will of course be
    discussed on domestic and international platforms. The aggressions
    carried out against Pamuk are those which have been carried out
    against thought. Pamuk is not alone.' Pamuk has cut the Gordian
    knot. He has become the hero of every right-thinking person in Turkey
    and every Armenian worldwide.

    * Nouritza Matossian is author of 'Black Angel, A Life of Arshile
    Gorky'.

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